Maharajah of Bikaner: India
By Hugh Purcell
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Maharajah of Bikaner - Hugh Purcell
Mitchell.
Prologue: 1919
On 15 November 1918, Ganga Singh, the 21st Maharaja of Bikaner, was at his palace in Rajasthan when he received a telegram from the Viceroy (vice-roi, literally ‘in the place of the king’), King George V’s representative and therefore the most senior British person in India. It said: ‘As a result of communications between myself and London I am now in a position to ask Your Highness to proceed to England at once. It is absolutely essential that Your Highness should secure accommodation on the Chindwara, sailing on 23 instant from Bombay. Your Highness will be gratified to learn that the Prime Minister himself expressed a wish that you should go to London now. Precise method in which Your Highness’ services will be asked has not yet been defined but I know Your Highness will understand the impossibility of getting matters clearly cut at the present juncture in the present stress.’¹
This was the Maharaja’s invitation to represent India at discussions in the Imperial War Cabinet and elsewhere about the peace settlement consequent upon the armistice with Germany, signed only a week before on 11 November. The status of an Indian delegation at the Peace Conference itself, due to begin at Paris in January, had not been decided. Indeed, it had not been decided whether India would be represented independently at all. This also applied to the Dominions of the British Empire, the name given to the member countries that governed themselves like Canada, Australia and South Africa. What had been decided was that India should be afforded the same status as a Dominion, although it was not a self-governing country. The fact that over one million Indian soldiers had fought for the British was considered reason enough to justify representation, if any were needed.
The fierce argument over representation called into question the very status of the Dominions. Were they nations or not? As the Prime Minister of Canada, Sir Robert Borden, wrote home to his wife: ‘Canada is a nation that is not a nation and it is about time we altered it.’² What was their status vis-à-vis each other? Sir Maurice Hankey, Secretary to the British War Cabinet and then to the Peace Conference, said ‘the Dominions are as jealous of each other as cats’.³ The row rumbled across the continents to national parliaments well into December. At first the British government assumed the Prime Ministers of the Dominions would ‘tag along to the Peace Conference as part of the British delegation’. This went down badly. Sir Robert Borden threatened to ‘pack [his] trunks, return to Canada, summon Parliament, and put the whole thing before them’⁴ unless Canada was given full representation. In the end the Prime Minister David Lloyd George gave way, and so did his two co-leaders in the Supreme War Council, Prime Minister Georges Clemenceau of France and President Woodrow Wilson of the United States. On 15 January 1919, ‘the British Dominions and India’ were classed as ‘belligerent powers with special interests’. As such, their representatives were invited to take part in sessions of the Conference that specifically concerned them. Like the larger Dominions, India was allowed two representatives, and here another contentious issue arose.
Lloyd George had already invited the Maharaja of Bikaner to represent the 600 Indian Princes. They formed a considerable power bloc because their states together covered about one-third of the land of India and one-fifth of the population. They were supposedly autonomous, and proud of the fact that they had sworn allegiance to the British Crown but not to the British government; a distinction of royal status. The remainder of the vast region – today divided into India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Myanmar (Burma) and Sri Lanka – was British India in 1919, governed by a Secretary of State in London and a Viceroy in Delhi. The Viceroy, Lord Chelmsford, had asked Sir SP Sinha to represent British India, and in some ways he was an obvious choice. He was a Bengali lawyer with considerable political experience who already served on the Viceroy’s Executive Council, the first Indian to do so. He, like Bikaner, had sat in the Imperial War Cabinet. Moreover, and this was what made his selection so obvious, Lloyd George was about to appoint him Under Secretary of State for India in his new Cabinet with a seat in the House of Lords. Thus, on 10 January 1919, Sir SP Sinha became the Lord Sinha of Raipur, the first Indian to be given a British peerage.
However, that left out of the delegation to Paris the Secretary of State for India, the Rt. Hon. Edwin Montagu, an ambitious politician who, unusually in that post, was dedicated to India. He was not pleased. He wrote to Lord Chelmsford: ‘An attempt is made to invite only your nominees, but I claim they cannot represent you without me.’⁵ He complained to Lloyd George, who gave in again. That meant three representatives in a delegation of two. What was to be done? Another form of words was required and the contemporary British history of the Peace Conference found one: ‘India was represented by her Parliamentary spokesmen, the Secretary of State and Lord Sinha, with the co-operation of the Maharaja of Bikaner.’⁶
The three Indian delegates at the Paris Conference all shared the vision of an India governing itself, but under the might of the British Empire. The key word over which much constitutional hot air was expended was ‘paramountcy’, meaning pre-eminency or supremacy, yet there was obviously a paradox here, even a contradiction. As Sinha said, he believed India should achieve autonomy within the British Empire through ‘gradual evolution and cautious progress’,⁷ but he could not think of a time when Britain would not be the paramount power in India.
‘We have gone – shall I say lightly? – into a series of decisions which put India so far as international affairs are concerned on a basis wholly inconsistent with the position of a subordinate country.’
EDWIN MONTAGU, 1919
Sinha, Bikaner and Montagu all believed the very presence of an Indian delegation at the Peace Conference with the same status as the Dominions was a huge step forward. Edwin Montagu wrote to Lord Chelmsford again: ‘I wonder whether you ever have time to reflect upon the profound, irretraceable [sic] changes that have been made in the Constitution of the British Empire in the last few months? We have gone – shall I say lightly? – into a series of decisions which put India so far as international affairs are concerned on a basis wholly inconsistent with the position of a subordinate country.’⁸
Lord Chelmsford did not share Montagu’s excitement. He replied lugubriously: ‘You set out the extraordinary development in India’s constitutional position. I entirely agree with you, but I do not think it would be wise for you or me to count on gratitude or respect. Someone said to me the other day India is grateful not for the past but for favours to come
and as I look back over the last three years and see the number of remedies I have made to supposed injustices, I despair, because these things are in no sense counted as righteousness but are forgotten and put aside.’⁹
What were these ‘reforms’ Montagu referred to? By a coincidence of timing, during the same few months Montagu and Sinha were at the Paris Peace Conference increasing the standing of India in an international forum, they were also steering through the British Parliament the Government of India Bill that would set up provincial legislatures in India empowering Indians to have more control over their own local affairs, an early step towards self-rule. This was why Lord Sinha had been appointed.
MOHANDAS GANDHI (1869–1948)
Gandhi was surely the most extraordinary freedom fighter of the 20th century because he believed in transforming society morally as well as politically. True independence meant not just removing the British Raj, but replacing it with communities that were self-sufficient, simple and peaceful. He exemplified this in his own life by wearing home-spun cotton, eating a vegetarian diet, eschewing violence and extending love to all irrespective of race or religion.
Gandhi came from a Hindu family but he saw God everywhere and he spoke for all religious communities. His doctrine of satyagraha did not mean ‘passive resistance’ as a consequence of direct action, but literally, ‘truth force’. He believed spiritual strength came from the rightness of the cause, sufficient to withstand prison and police beatings. He was revered like a god and his spiritual powers were invoked: ‘O Mahatma (‘great soul’), make my body non-violent’ a passive resister might say as the blow of the lathi (police truncheon) hit his back.
Gandhi came from a middle-class trading family in Gujarat and first practised as a lawyer representing downtrodden Indians in South Africa. Yet he loved the life of the Indian village, and saw the peasants as his natural allies. This was why the Indian National Congress recognised him as indispensable: ‘He is a man of commanding personality who inspires devotion in India’s millions’ said Jawaharlal Nehru. His philosophy offered a way forward that was neither the slow-moving constitutionalism of Bikaner and Sinha, nor the self-destructive terrorism of Bal Tilak. He was also a born showman and a shrewd politician.
Hence he overcame the might of the British Empire. One is bound to ask, nevertheless, whether his satyagraha would have been as effective against the totalitarian regimes of the age, Hitler’s Nazism and Stalin’s Communism.
The first few months of 1919 were momentous times in the history of Indian independence. What happened in Paris and London was only part of the story. Far away from the chandeliers and champagne of these two capitals, in the stifling heat and poverty of a north Indian town, a tragedy took place that provoked the human rights lawyer and political activist Mohandas Gandhi to begin his demand for swaraj, or complete self-government for India. This was the Amritsar Massacre of April 1919. In an enclosed public area the size of Trafalgar Square, troops of the British Indian Army fired on a peaceful rally protesting against British rule. They killed or wounded nearly 2,000 civilians in a matter of minutes. In India this atrocity overwhelmed any goodwill the British government was earning with its Government of India Bill and by its advocacy of constitutional autonomy for India in Paris. It pushed to one side the pro-British reformers led by Montagu, Sinha and Bikaner, and gave centre stage to Gandhi, a saint-like revolutionary who soon became known throughout India as the mahatma or ‘great soul’, the Father of the Nation. His vision was for pura swaraj (Hindi for ‘complete independence’) and now, outraged by the massacre in Amritsar, he set out on his path of satyagraha (‘passive resistance’) in order to achieve it.
‘He is a figure out of the Arabian Nights with jewel-studded turban, an exceedingly handsome countenance and upright bearing.’
FRANCES STEVENSON ON THE MAHARAJA OF BIKANER
The full significance of Amritsar did not register in Paris at the time. The British Empire delegation had a more pressing question to answer. Come the signing of the Treaty of Versailles in June, who should sign first on behalf of India – Bikaner, the princely soldier, or Sinha, the Bengali politician? The King-Emperor, as George V was titled, was consulted over the telephone. According to Montagu, he ‘expressed himself emphatically of the opinion that Bikaner’s name should come first’.¹⁰ This is not surprising, for King George and the Maharaja of Bikaner were friends. In fact Bikaner had been a most loyal ADC (honorary aide de camp or assistant) to King George since their first meeting in 1902 when the Maharaja had visited London for the coronation of Edward VII; then, of course, the future King George V was still Prince of Wales. On subsequent meetings, they indulged each other with shooting parties and gossip rather than talk of politics. King George then astonished Montagu by saying ‘he was surprised to learn that Bikaner was not a British subject!’¹¹ This speaks well for Bikaner’s loyalty to King George and his English accent – he prided himself in his knowledge of Edwardian slang – but less well for the King-Emperor’s powers of observation.
In the end, Montagu and Bikaner signed the Treaty of Versailles and Sinha did not. A modest, self-effacing man who referred to himself as ‘just a foot soldier of reform’,¹² Sinha probably eschewed the limelight. The same could not be said of the Maharaja, an extrovert who enjoyed the many trappings of his rank. Lloyd George referred to him as a ‘magnificent specimen of manhood’ and Lloyd George’s secretary and mistress Frances Stevenson was even more adulatory: ‘He is a figure out of the Arabian Nights with jewel-studded turban, an exceedingly handsome countenance and upright bearing.’¹³
One wonders if that is why the artist Sir William Orpen, when painting his iconic picture The Signing of the Peace now hanging in the Imperial War Museum, London, stood him and Sir Edwin Montagu directly behind Lloyd George. There is the majestic Maharaja, placed centre-stage between two pillars with the light shining on him from the mirror behind. Yet probably the first reaction of many who gaze at this picture is to wonder what this exotic character, so conspicuous among the elderly Western statesmen, was doing at the Paris Peace